Repairing plasma membrane damage in regulated necrotic cell death.

Mol Biol Rep

Chemistry Department, De La Salle University, 2401 Taft Avenue, 0922, Manila, Philippines.

Published: March 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The plasma membrane acts as a semi-permeable barrier that is essential for maintaining cell stability and survival, but it can be compromised by various stresses, leading to the need for repair mechanisms.
  • The repair of the membrane is triggered by the influx of calcium ions and relies on calcium-binding proteins, with the type of repair depending on the nature of the damage and the specific cell type involved.
  • In cases of regulated necrotic cell death, such as necroptosis, pyroptosis, and ferroptosis, damaged membranes can lead to cell lysis and immune responses, and the ESCRT-III repair mechanism plays a vital role in influencing the outcome of these pathways and their related immune effects.

Article Abstract

The plasma membrane performs a central role in maintaining cellular homeostasis and viability by acting as a semi-permeable barrier separating the cell from its surroundings. Under physiological conditions, it is constantly exposed to different kinds of stress, such as from pore-forming proteins/toxins and mechanical activity, that compromises its integrity resulting in cells developing various ways to cope with these dangers to survive. These plasma membrane repair mechanisms are initiated by the rapid influx of extracellular Ca ions and are thus hinged on the activity of various Ca-binding proteins. The cell's response to membrane damage also depends on the nature and extent of the stimuli as well as the cell type, and the mechanisms involved are believed to be not mutually exclusive. In regulated necrotic cell death, specifically necroptosis, pyroptosis, and ferroptosis, plasma membrane damage ultimately causes cell lysis and the release of immunomodulating damage-associated molecular patterns. Here, I will discuss how these three cell death pathways are counterbalanced by the action of ESCRT (Endosomal Sorting Complex Required for Transport)-III-dependent plasma membrane repair mechanism, that eventually affects the profile of released cytokines and cell-to-cell communication. These highlight a crucial role that plasma membrane repair play in regulated necrosis, and its potential as a viable target to modulate the immune responses associated with these pathways in the context of the various human pathologies where these cell death modalities are implicated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11033-021-06252-wDOI Listing

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